GREECE AND HER FINANCES

Similar documents
The Development of International Trade: The Future Aim of Macedonia

Distinguished guests, parliamentary colleagues, ladies and gentlemen.

Globus Maritime Limited Trading Update and Financial Highlights for the Three Months and Nine Months Ended September 30, 2007.

South Aegan Region (Greece)

Good morning! You need: both sheets from yesterday! Write HW in agenda: BRING IN CANS. College day tomorrow: Wear college shirts and hats!

Chapter 25 Geography and the Settlement of Greece. How did geography influence settlement and way of life in ancient Greece?

ASSEMBLY 35TH SESSION

Benchmarking Travel & Tourism in Russia

CENTRAL HISTORICAL QUESTION WHY DO THE BALKANS MATTER?

Who goes where? How long do they stay? How much do they spend?

Canada s Contributions Abroad WWII

Benchmarking Travel & Tourism in United Arab Emirates

Management s Review and Analysis of Financial Position

Petrofin Research Greek fleet statistics

The Rise of Rome. After about 800 BC other people also began settling in Italy The two most notable were the and the

Italy. Country Profile. April 2012

Aircraft industry takes off while air transport remains grounded

North Africa. Chapter 25. Chapter 25, Section

Tourist Traffic in the City of Rijeka For the Period Between 2004 and 2014

Travel Profiles A SNAPSHOT OF KEY MARKETS

A Short History of Athens

INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION

BRAZIL INTERNATIONAL INBOUND TRAVEL MARKET PROFILE (2011) Copyright 2012 by the U.S. Travel Association. All Rights Reserved.

Benchmarking Travel & Tourism in Australia

CONTACT: Investor Relations Corporate Communications

CROWN ANNOUNCES 2018 HALF YEAR RESULTS

Passenger services 7,438 10,550 Cargo services 4,405 4,225 Catering and other services Turnover 1 12,275 15,511

Balance sheets and additional ratios

THE 2006 ECONOMIC IMPACT OF TRAVEL & TOURISM IN INDIANA

RESULTS RELEASE 20 August GENTING HONG KONG GROUP ANNOUNCES FIRST HALF RESULTS FOR 2015 Highlights

Case study: outbound tourism from New Zealand

EASYJET INTERIM MANAGEMENT STATEMENT FOR THE QUARTER ENDED 30 JUNE 2010

$131 MILLION OPERATING PROFIT IN THIRD QUARTER AMID CHALLENGING ENVIRONMENT

Text 1: Empire Building Through Conquest. Topic 6: Ancient Rome and the Origins of Christianity Lesson 2: The Roman Empire: Rise and Decline

British Columbia. property society. Annual report unclaimedpropertybc.ca

January 6, Chapter 7 & 8 Vocab. due Wednesday, 1/11

Mining Activity and Regional Development Eleftherios Faidros Chairman

INTESA SANPAOLO VITA RESULTS AT 31 MARCH 2017 APPROVED:

Trade in Ancient Greece

26 October 2017 Icelandair Group Interim Report NET PROFIT USD 101 MILLION IN THIRD QUARTER

AN ACT (S. B. 1437) (No ) (Approved December 1, 2010)

Chapter 4. Daily Focus Skills

Chapter 12 Study Guide Eastern Europe

Flughafen Wien Group Continues on Success Path in the First Quarter of 2016

Mediterranean Europe

HK GAAP RESULTS RELEASE 25 February 2008 STAR CRUISES GROUP ANNOUNCES FOURTH QUARTER AND FULL YEAR RESULTS FOR 2007

Reading Informational Medford 549C Work Sample Effective February 2010 Informational Text Title:

SOCIAL-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF DAGESTAN

PRESS ANNOUNCEMENT JULY 28, 1999 For Immediate Release STAR CRUISES REPORTS RECORD SECOND QUARTER EARNINGS

Finnair Q Result

GROUP ULJANIK PLOVIDBA CONSOLIDATED AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE PERIOD JANUARY - DECEMBER 2014

EASYJET INTERIM MANAGEMENT STATEMENT FOR THE QUARTER ENDED 31 DECEMBER 2010

Benchmarking Travel & Tourism in Colombia

The contribution of Tourism to the Greek economy in 2017

Management Discussions and Analysis for the three-month period ended 31 March 2014 and Executive Summary

IHG. Supplementary Information 31 December 2014

CONTACT: Investor Relations Corporate Communications

REQUEST FOR EXTENSION OF THE TIME LIMIT SET IN ARTICLE 5 TO COMPLETE THE DESTRUCTION OF ANTI-PERSONNEL MINES. Summary. Submitted by Senegal

JAPAN AIRLINES Co., Ltd. Financial Results 1 st Quarter Mar/2017(FY2016) July 29, 2016

2. Industry and Business

Thank you for participating in the financial results for fiscal 2014.

Executive Directors Review

First-half result 2015 MCH Group

Forward-looking Statements

Flughafen Wien Group Maintains Upward Trend: Passenger Growth and Strong Earnings Improvement in the First Nine Months of 2016

AMR CORPORATION REPORTS SECOND QUARTER 2012 RESULTS

Cuba and Trade: a Sixth District Connection

Ancient Greece GREECE UNIT 5 GEOGRAPHY CHALLENGE. 1 Unit 5 Geography Challenge miles. Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area Projection

SkyWest, Inc. Announces First Quarter 2018 Profit

Flatholm Island Lighthouse

Contribution from UNCTAD dated: 29 June 2010

OPEN SKIES TREATY Last Updated 2/18/10 Compiled by Dave Harris

Presentation on Results for the 2nd Quarter FY Idemitsu Kosan Co.,Ltd. November 14, 2018

Module 1 Educator s Guide: Representative Discussion Points Investigation 3

2017 results: REVENUE up to million (+1.6%), NET PROFIT FOR THE PERIOD 1 shows significant increase to million (+12.

Essential Question: What is Hellenism? What were the lasting characteristics of the Roman Republic & the Roman Empire?

AGRITECH th December 2017, Podgorica

Copa Holdings Reports Net Income of $57.7 million and EPS of $1.36 for the Third Quarter of 2018

Heathrow (SP) Limited

Land area 1.73 million km 2 Queensland population (as at 31 December 2017) Brisbane population* (preliminary estimate as at 30 June 2017)

TRADE STATISTICS BULLETIN

Presentation on Results for the 2nd Quarter FY Idemitsu Kosan Co.,Ltd. November 1, 2016

Geography of Ancient Greece Summary Sheet for Use in Assessment

AEROFLOT ANNOUNCES FY 2017 IFRS FINANCIAL RESULTS

Copa Holdings Reports Net Income of $136.5 million and EPS of $3.22 for the First Quarter of 2018

REGULATIONS FOR DECLARATION AND DISPOSAL OF UNCLAIMED ITEMS OF THE PIRAEUS CONTAINER TERMINAL S.A. IN THE PIRAEUS FREE ZONE

The Persian Empire 550 BCE-330 BCE

Bosnia and Herzegovina

Ancient Greece. Teachers Curriculum Institute Geography and the Settlement of Greece 1

Tourism Snapshot. June 2015 Volume 11, Issue 6. A focus on the markets in which Destination Canada (DC) and its partners are active.

BREA. Contribution of Cruise Tourism to the Economies of Europe Country Report Italy. The European Cruise Council Euroyards. Business Research &

Operational Performance Data

Ancient Greece. Chapter 6 Section 1 Page 166 to 173

Consolidated Statement of Financial Position as at December 31, 2017

CONTACT: Investor Relations Corporate Communications

El Al Israel Airlines announced today its financial results for the year 2016 and the fourth quarter of the year:

Albania Official name: Total area Urban-rural population Form of government Urban Rural:

United Kingdom. How does Travel & Tourism compare to other sectors? GDP. Size. Share. UK GDP Impact by Industry. UK GDP Impact by Industry

Important Peace Treaties from European History.

AIR CANADA REPORTS 2010 THIRD QUARTER RESULTS; Operating Income improved $259 million or 381 per cent from previous year s quarter

Transcription:

GREECE AND HER FINANCES O M. S. EULAMBIO I N the seventh day of April, 1921, Greece celebrated the first centennial of the Greek Revolution. In those times, Turkey was a great military Power. The Turks possessed then a consolidated empire comprising the whole of the Balkan peninsula, almost the entire Black Sea, Northern Africa and a large part of Asia. Wars to liberate the Greek population from the Turkish yoke had lasted nearly seven years. Owing, however, to jealousy prevailing among the Great Powers, Greece was created a kingdom with very small borders, leaving outside of its frontiers the larger part of the country. It comprised a territory of 18,500 square miles and a population of some 700,000 to 800,000. Nothing but stones had been left in a country which was flourishing at the time of the conquest. A twofold task was to be accomplished, to recivilise the freed territories, and to liberate the Greeks still left under the Turkish yoke. Bad diplomacy turned into fighters one of the most peaceful of races. The territorial increase up to 1912 amounted to 6,600 square miles. On the 30th September, 1912, the day of the outbreak of the Balkan Wars, Greece possessed a territory of 25,100 square miles and a population of 2,700,000. As a consequence of the great events of the following eleven years, it has still further increased, having to-day a surface of about 54,000 square miles, and a population qf 6,600,000. In order to obtain these results Greece waged the two wars of 1912-1913, participated in the Great War, and fought fiercely for more than three years quite alone against Turkey assisted by Bolshevism in Asia Minor. During the Great War, the factors contributing to the victory of the Allied and Associated Powers were four: Men, money, ships and economy, even in imported food stuffs. In every direction, Greece rendered the Allies many valuable services. Her only external financial assistance was that of the Allied Governments (British and French) which advanced to Greece some Fcs 30,000,- 000 from 1914 till 1917; during 1919-1920 6,540,000 were also advanced from Great Britain and $15,000,000 from the United States. During the last 15 years (1912-1927) Greece has expended for extraordinary requirements, military needs, and in the settle-

474 THE DALHOUSIE REVIEW ment and maintenance of refugees a total sum exceeding 173,000,- 000. Out of this total the fraction representing assistance from abroad amounted to only 36,000,000, which was received in the fonn of loans. The whole of the remainder was found by the country from its own resources. The finances of Greece have undergone the following change. Before the outbreak of the 1912-13 wars, her total indebtedness amounted to Dr. 1,040,000,000, corresponding to Dr. 385 per inhabitant (population 2,700,0(0). Her national debt increased during the last 15 years to Dr. 9,500,000,000 (1,685,000,000 in gold and Dr. 7,815,000,000 in paper). The value of the whole debt in gold would be Dr. 2,250,000,000, corresponding to Dr. 341 per inhabitant (population 6,600,000). The proportion in the gold value of the debt is smaller than before the Balkan Wars (1912) on account of the fact that the larger part of the new debt has been contracted in the interior in paper, and is affecting a population more than double that of 1912. Only two loans have been placed in foreign markets, (1914, 20,000,000, 5%: between the issue price of 92 and the present rate of 67 a depreciation of 28%-1924, 12,000,000, 7%, issue price 88, actual rate 97 with an appreciation of 10%). In comparison with Great Britain and the United States, the following has been the proportion of debt per inhabitant: United States... I........ $166 Great Britain........................ 634 Greece.............................. 68 Funded debt in gold amounted to Dr. 1,455,000,000 (ag~inst 935,- 000,000 in September 1912)-the larger part in Greek hands. The service was covered by the proceeds of the revenue controlled by the International Financial Commission (Great Britain, France, Italy). From the old debt concluded in gold up to 1893 the interest rate guaranteed to the International Financial Commission in 1898 amounted to 1.60%-1.72% for the loans of 5%. The constant increase of revenue rendered possible a constant increase of the rates. Full interest was paid in the years 1920 and 1921. Owing to the depreciation of the exchange, the rate was reduced to 3.60% in 1922; it rose, however, to 3.80% in the year 1923, 3.70% in 1924, 4.30% in 1925, 5% in 1926. The 50/0 loans of the old debt were quoted at 38.18% in 1898, reached constantly increasing 50% in 1905, surpassed 55% in 1917, reached 70% in 1919, fell to 34.51% in 1922 (owing to the Asia :rvlinor catastrophe and the internal

GREECE AND HER FINANCES 415 troubles), and rose to 41.61% in 1923, 52.28% in 1924, 56.24% in 1925, 58.35% in 1926. The quotation in June 1927 was 56%. A very heavy taxation was imposed during the last five years -a first forced loan in 1922, a capital taxation in 1923, and a second forced loan in 1925. Happily the internal strifes came to an end (they had lasted for more than ten years) and a coalition cabinet soon afterwards was entrusted with responsibility. Great efforts are made to restore again the national finances. Judging from the vitality of the country, we are convinced that it will not be difficult to return to healthy conditions if nothing occurs to disturb the internal and external peace. The National Bank of Greece is its only bank of issue. 1 It was founded in 1842 as a joint-stock company, and continues to maintain its private character. The main strength of the bank lies in the policy adopted from the very beginning of accepting deposits at sight as well as at long term. The bank's policy has always been the promotion of every kind of business, in order to facilitate the development of the country's resources. When it was first created, practically no credit existed. By studying the bank's annual balance-sheets we can follow the country's progress, a large share of which is due to its policy. No institution could have been more liberal to commerce, industry, agriculture, and in general to the country's interests, at home and abroad. The National Bank of Greece has not only been the means of fostering every branch of business, but it has also always been the helping-hand in the hour of need. Every kind of financial difficulty has been smoothed over, thanks to its strength and good will. Although the Balkan Wars added not a little to its burdens, it maintained its serenity at the outbreak of the Great War, while most of the other Central European banks seemed paralysed. In addition to its other enormous obligations, it became a wholesale merchant of articles of prime necessity. And while state illtervention proved a failure in every country, the National Bank of Greece undertook even the difficult task of supplying the country with food during the first three years of the war (1914-1917) with signal success. In the spring and summer of 1919 Greece possessed the best currency in Europe, the drachma still maintaining its gold value. Many were the reasons for the depreciation of the Greek money unit. One of the principal was the only partial execution of the financial agreements of 1917, 1918, 1919 between on the one side of the Governments of Great Britain, France and the United States (1) cf. M. S. Eularnbto, The National BaTik of Greece, a History of the FiTlaTicial and Economic EvolutioTi 0 jgreece (1924). /./ ',,:

476 THE DALHOUSIE REVIEW and on the other side the Government of Greece. War engagements of 30,000,000 comprised under the above agreements were settled by the National Bank of Greece, while the funds were never restituted by the Allied Governments. 4,000,000, moreover, was representing the capital under embargo in the late Central Empires. The Asia Minor campaign was another reason of depreciation. The debacle in Asia Minor found the dollar at Dr. 31.15%. Following were the middle rates of the London exchange between 1923-1926: 1923... Dr. 293.85 (maximum 430) 1924................. "247.34 ( " 285) 1925................. "312.62 ( " 392.25) 1926................. "386. 50 ( " 453.-) In the first half of June, 1927, the London exchange in drachma was fluctuating about 360. Within the last three years the changes in the money circulation were insignificant (Dr. 4.681,000,000 on Dec. 31st, 1923, against Dr. 4,530,000,000 on Dec. 31st, 1926). Following were the fluctuations of the index numbers in the last five years: 1922, 774; 1923, 1214; 1924, 1342; 1925, 1485; 1926, 1784. The table below might illustrate the relation of money, foreign exchange and index numbers in 1926 in comparison with June 30th, 1914: June 30, 1914 1926 Money circulation............ 411 mil. 430 mil. Foreign Exchange............ 25.22 Dr. 386.50 Progress of increase: Money circulation.... Foreign Exchange.... Index Numbers.... I 100 100 100 1.102 1.532 1.784 Greece is an agricultural country. Agricultural produce and cattle breeding represent more than half of the nation's income. From agricultural and stock farming there remains a large surplus. It is self-supporting in every food article, except bread (the imported quantities of wheat necessitate some 25 million dollars). The problem of Europe is also the problem of Greece. Millions of acres lie fallow on account of marshes. Not only are they Wlproductive, but they undennine the health of the population. Drainage of marshes, as also regulation of the river basins, would contribute to solve a double and most urgent problem; bread and health. The Foundation Company of New York is occupied with such a drainage work in Macedonia.

GREECE AND HER FINANCES 477 Our chief exportable articles are: Currants, tobacco, wmes, olives, olive-oil. The principal of these products is tobacco. There is a monopoly in qualities. A fifth of it is used for the needs of Greece, the rest is availq,ble for exportation. I t comprises the most famous qualities of tobacco. The olive-tree is the most ancient tree in Greece. The country is ahnost unexploited. I t possesses a very fertile soil, and large forests still untouched. It is moreover rich in minerals and metals, even in precious metals. From a commercial and industrial point of view, Greece has made considerable progress during the last 15 years.. The gross earnings of the industrial concerns in 1926 were estimated at 20,000,000, while thirty years ago there was scarcely any industry at all. Following was the movement of the foreign trade during the last three years: Year Imports Exports Difference Value in Sterling in tons in tons in tons Imports Exports Difference 1924..... 1.798.588 413.406 1.385.182 32.555.000 13.246.000 19.309.000 1925........ 2.101.809 565.945 1.535.864 32.643.000 14.520.000 18.123.000 1926......... 1.851.000 566.000 1.285.000 26.802.000 13.388.000 13.414.000 Considering all invisible items, we must regard the general balance of the foreign accounts as in each year favourable. In the last thirty years, wealth increased by more than six times-from 150,- 000,000 to over 1,000,000,000. The income of 1926 was estimated at 100,000,000. Our merchant marine consisted of 472 steamers and 1207 sailing-ships, i. e. a tonnage of 989.275 tons. As a mercantile port the Piraeus comes third after Marseille and Genoa, showing the following movement in the years 1915-1926: Number of Steamer!' I Tonnage 1915............ 3.827 e)................. 2.430.680 1920........... 4.720..................... 2.878.857 1923.......... 6.079....................4.119.540 1924........... 7.142.............. 4.651.121 1925.... 7.940....... 5.387.624 1926...... 8.312................ 5.990.337 Greece is one of those countries which meet their foreign obligations as before the outbreak of the Great War. On the old debt, moreover, the interest rates were in 1920, 1921, 1926, double (1) In 1915 Greece was still neutral.

478 THE DALHOUSIE REVIEW those of 1912. Despite the heavy taxation the country is not exhausted. A portion of the big holders of foreign exchange are awaiting consolidation of the financial situation in order to decide on the return journey of their foreign funds to Greek waters. From its very creation, Greece was fully occupied with external troubles. The retaken territories were entirely neglected under the Turkish misrule of half a millennium. Should peace be of a longer duration, the Greek will most certainly prove once again his civilising spirit. He belongs to a peace-loving race that has become warrior by the force of circumstances.